Lakers coach JJ Redick properly represented in Coach of the Year voting

The NBA’s end-of-season awards voting is just as divisive of a time within the league’s calendar as any other.

And not just because of the actual outcomes, but the voting results for each award create arguments within themselves.

Lakers fans passionately defended franchise Luka Doncic, believing that he should’ve placed higher than fourth in the voting for league MVP that was awarded to Thunder superstar Shai Gilgeous-Alexander for the second consecutive season

Lakers coach JJ Redick finished seventh in voting after receiving three third-places votes. Getty Images
Redick finishing seventh wasn’t a snub. NBAE via Getty Images

Or that Doncic should’ve unanimously been an All-NBA first team selection instead of receiving 91 first-team votes and nine second-team votes.

Voters defend why they made certain choices, such as Justin Termine of SiriusXM explaining why he was the lone voter to leave Victor Wembanyama off his All-NBA first team, voting him second. 

The debates about “snubs” are part of the NBA awards’s annual cycle. 

But when the voting results for Coach of the Year was announced on Tuesday, revealing that Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla received the honor, it also showed that Lakers coach JJ Redick finished seventh in voting after receiving three third-places votes. 

And was a completely fair spot for Redick to finish at. 

Oftentimes, Coach of the Year goes to the coach who led the highest overachivers of the season.  Getty Images

Redick finishing seventh wasn’t a snub.

While arguments could be made that he should’ve received more votes, Redick finished with the proper range in the voting.

Oftentimes, Coach of the Year goes to the coach who led the highest overachivers of the season. 


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And the Lakers were certainly one of the league’s biggest overachievers in context with their preseason expectations.

But the finalist for Coach of the Year – Muzzulla, Pistons’ J.B. Bickerstaff and Spurs’ Mitch Johnson – led each of their teams to even more overachieving seasons than Redick did for the Lakers.

Externally, the Celtics were expected to treat 2025-26 as a “gap” year after the Achilles tear Jayson Tatum suffered last 2025. The Celtics responded with a 56-win season for the second-best record in the Eastern Conference and fourth-best record in the league despite Boston’s roster turnover and Tatum only playing 16 regular season games.

And the Lakers were certainly one of the league’s biggest overachievers in context with their preseason expectations. AP

The Pistons were expected to be a playoff team, but not the No. 1 seed in the East they finished the regular season at, winning 13 more games than their preseason over/under. 

The Spurs went from being viewed as a potential play-in team in the preseason to the second-best team in the league during the regular season, winning 18 more games than their preseason over/under. 

Similar cases exist for Hornets coach Charles Lee and Suns coach Jordon Ott, who finished fourth and fifth in the voting, respectively. They both led their teams to postseason play after not being expected to be a factor in those conversations during the preseason.

This doesn’t take away from the season Redick and his coaching staff had. 

Redick led the Lakers to a 53-win season despite his best players in Luka Doncic (18), LeBron James (22) and Austin Reaves (31) all missing a significant amount of regular season games.

Despite the depth of the roster lacking compared to the team’s around the West. 

This doesn’t take away from the season Redick and his coaching staff had.  NBAE via Getty Images

Redick was just as big of a part in the Lakers’ success, which included winning seven more games than their preseason over/under, as any other party. 

But the finalists for the award had clear cut cases for being above Redick based on their teams’ overachieving seasons. 

Finishing in the No. 4-7 range felt like the best-case scenario for Redick.

And that doesn’t take away from what he’s achieved in his short time as a coach. 

He’s shown through back-to-back 50-win seasons that he’s one of the best coaches at scheming defensively, helping the Lakers outperform expectations on that end two seasons in a row. 

Redick has mostly maximized the roster in back-to-back seasons, getting the most as reasonably expected. 

He should be in consideration for Coach of the Year for years to come. 

There were just other coaches who had better cases.

Is Chris MacFarland The Reason The Avalanche Keep Falling Short?

Multiple reports have suggested the Nashville Predators could target Colorado Avalanche general manager Chris MacFarland to run their hockey operations department. If that opportunity is real, the reaction in Denver may not be panic or outrage.

It may simply be: thanks for the run, and good luck.

That sounds harsh for a general manager who helped oversee a Presidents’ Trophy-caliber season. But in Colorado, regular season success stopped being the standard a long time ago. This organization is measured in Stanley Cups now, and since winning it all in 2022, the Avalanche have delivered a first-round exit, a second-round exit, and now a humiliating Western Conference Final sweep against the Vegas Golden Knights.

At some point, the conversation stops being about bad luck and starts becoming about leadership.

Not just Jared Bednar.

Everybody.

The Stars Vanished When Colorado Needed Them Most

Martin Nečas had a 100-point season. On paper, that sounds like validation for Chris MacFarland after moving on from Mikko Rantanen. And to be fair to Nečas, he did produce through the first two rounds of the playoffs, posting a goal and 12 assists in 13 games while becoming a point-per-game player in the postseason for the first time in his career.

But against Vegas, he disappeared.

Then again, in all fairness, you could say that about the entire team.

Brock Nelson looked like one of the smartest additions Colorado made all season. He played Selke-caliber hockey for stretches, helped Team USA capture Olympic gold, and brought the kind of two-way stability contenders need this time of year.

Then the playoffs hit another level, and suddenly he could barely hit the net.

And then there’s Nathan MacKinnon.

The Avalanche superstar captured his first Maurice “Rocket” Richard Trophy as the NHL’s leading goal scorer in the regular season. He spent the entire year looking like the best player on the planet, dragging Colorado through injuries, inconsistency, and long stretches where the roster around him felt incomplete.

And yet in the biggest series of the season, MacKinnon did not score a single goal.

That almost does not sound real.

Yes, he was clearly hurt. Yes, Vegas defended him aggressively every shift. But when your franchise player goes silent for four straight games and your supporting cast completely crumbles around him, it becomes impossible to ignore what actually happened.

Colorado didn’t just lose.

They disintegrated.

That’s what makes this collapse feel different from the others. This wasn’t a seven-game war. This wasn’t a bounce here or there. The Avalanche looked overwhelmed, frustrated, disconnected, and completely out of answers by the end of the series.

Meanwhile, Vegas looked calm the entire time.

Prepared. Structured. Ruthless.

The Golden Knights were obviously better than their regular-season record suggested, and every stylistic breakdown entering the series hinted this matchup would be tighter than people realized. But even then, nobody expected Colorado to fold the way it did.

Injuries or not, the Avalanche had no response once adversity hit.

The Rantanen Trade Will Follow MacFarland Everywhere

That’s why the Mikko Rantanen conversation is never going away.

Was it really worth trading one of the best postseason performers in hockey for a package that still feels incomplete? Rantanen was expensive, yes. The reported ask around $14 million annually was significant. But it also sounded like there was room to negotiate before things completely unraveled.

Instead, MacFarland pulled the trigger.

And now the Avalanche are left trying to explain why the player who used to carry them through playoff rounds is suddenly gone while Colorado keeps falling short.

Meanwhile, Carolina looks thrilled with how its side of the broader situation played out, Logan Stankoven looks like a future star, and they could very well make the Stanley Cup Finals. Meanwhile, Colorado is stuck trying to convince everyone the move was about long-term vision rather than panic management.

Fair or not, that’s the reality now.

You can call it aggressive asset management if you want.

Fans are starting to call it something else.

“Quick Trigger Finger MacFarland.”

And honestly, after the way this season ended, it’s not hard to understand why.

Colorado’s Goaltending Gamble Never Truly Changed

The Avalanche have spent years acting like they can outscore structural problems.

Sometimes they can.

Four rounds of playoff hockey usually say otherwise.

Colorado finally stabilized the position with Darcy Kuemper during the Stanley Cup run. He battled through injuries, gave them timely saves, and helped them win a championship. Then the organization immediately pivoted away from him as if elite goaltending suddenly became optional again.

That decision set off another cycle of bargain hunting.

Alexandar Georgiev was brought in and briefly looked serviceable behind an elite roster before everything unraveled. The Avalanche then pivoted again, bringing in Mackenzie Blackwood and Scott Wedgewood to patch the position together one more time.

Blackwood even received a five-year extension worth $5.25 million annually almost immediately after arriving.

That’s a major commitment for someone who eventually lost his starting job to  Wedgewood this season. Blackwood did play brilliant in Game 4, but that's beside the point. He wasn't consistent enough throughout the season to be considered the number one guy, despite his exorbitant salary. 

And that’s the problem with Colorado’s approach under MacFarland. Every move feels temporary. Every solution feels like a patch instead of a foundation.

There’s always another adjustment coming.

Another reset.

Another attempt to outsmart the problem rather than truly solve it.

The Avalanche Lost Their Identity

What made the 2022 Avalanche special wasn’t just talent.

It was chemistry.

Everybody had a role. Everybody bought in. That team felt connected. Dangerous. Relentless.

This version of the Avalanche feels different.

Now it’s about rentals. Reunions. Deadline swings. Familiar names. Emotional nostalgia plays.

Nazem Kadri returns and immediately people wonder if Colorado is trying to recreate something that already came and went. Erik Johnson gets brought back for another run and fans understandably love the emotion of it, but hockey decisions cannot survive on emotion alone.

At some point, you have to ask what the actual direction is.

Because this current version of the Avalanche looked nothing like the connected machine that rolled through the league in 2022. That team found ways to win.

This team found every way to lose and got exposed while doing so. 

When Vegas punched them, they had no response. When Vegas dished out cheap shots, no one batted an eye. Contenders find ways to survive adversity. Colorado looked consumed by it.

And the scary part is this wasn’t some shocking upset.

Vegas exposed problems that have quietly existed for years.

The Avalanche still have MacKinnon. They still have Cale Makar. As long as those two exist, the Stanley Cup window remains somewhat open. 

But windows eventually close when management mistakes urgency for vision.

Chris MacFarland may not be a bad general manager. But after another disappointing ending, it’s fair to ask whether he’s actually building toward something new — or simply rearranging pieces around a core talented enough to mask deeper flaws for most of the regular season.

Because in Colorado, regular season brilliance no longer means anything.

Not anymore.

Image

Avalanche Elimination Finalizes Value Of Pick Islanders Sent To Blues In Brayden Schenn Trade

On Tuesday night, the Colorado Avalanche were eliminated from the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs after being swept by the Vegas Golden Knights in the Western Conference Finals. 

Colorado's elimination does have an impact on the New York Islanders, given that they traded the 2026 first-round pick they acquired from the Avalanche in the Brock Nelson deal to the St. Louis Blues in their 2026 NHL Trade Deadline deal for Brayden Schenn. 

At the time, that pick wasn't known, but now we know it will be No. 29. 

Here are the last 10 players to be selected with the 29th overall pick:

2025: Mason West — Chicago Blackhawks

2024: Emil Hemming — Dallas Stars

2023: Theo Lindstein — St. Louis Blues

2022: Maveric Lamoureux — Arizona Coyotes

2021: Chaz Lucius — Winnipeg Jets

2020: Brendan Brisson — Vegas Golden Knights

2019: Brayden Tracey — Anaheim Ducks

2018: Rasmus Sandin — Toronto Maple Leafs

2017: Henri Jokiharju — Chicago Blackhawks

2016: Trent Frederic — Boston Bruins

Does this change the way you view the Schenn deal?

Clippers mock draft roundup: Los Angeles wants a dynamic guard

The Los Angeles Clippers are on the clock. They have a potential franchise-altering decision to make on how creative they will get this summer with the rights to the No. 5 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft.

A lot will factor into their moves including what they will do with superstar Kawhi Leonard, but it seems a trade is evitable. Their options are either moving on from Leonard and trading him for draft capital or good players, which seems unlikely.

During an appearance on Third Apron Podcast with Yossi Gozlan, Law Murray — the Clippers beat writer for The Athletic — said its plausible they will double down on the Leonard era and draft a solid prospect or trade the No. 5 pick for "ready-now" assets.

"The best case is the Clippers just keeping Kawhi and making it work, because Kawhi is clearly the best of those players," Murray said. "And I don't think that draft capital is worth trading him for the dudes who would be coming back. Like the floor of those dudes are in the basement. That's a problem."

With the Clippers picking No. 5, they need to find a replacement for their former starting center Ivica Zubac, who they traded during the season to the Indiana Pacers.

In addition, they need to find a player who is young, athletic and a playmaker who can both score and facilitate the Clipper offense. They went out and got a player who does that in Darius Garland who was acquired in a trade with the Cleveland Cavaliers for James Harden.

The Clippers have been linked to a number of guard prospects in this year's draft class.

USA TODAY Sports' Bryan Kalbrosky has the Clippers going with Kingston Flemings, the 19-year-old guard out of Houston, with the draft's fifth overall selection. Kalbrosky doesn't expect it to take long for Flemings' name to be called. The Houston guard stands at 6-foot-3 with a 6-foot-4 wingspan.

"The Clippers received this pick from the Indiana Pacers and when they are on the clock at No. 5 overall, look for them to potentially call on Houston freshman Kingston Flemings. The All-Big 12 guard has several games when he has recorded at least three steals, notching eight against Arizona State earlier this season," Kalbrosky wrote. "He scored 42 points against No. 11 Texas Tech on Jan. 24. Flemings helped lead Houston to the Sweet 16, and with highs as high as his were this season, it will not take long for him to hear his name called on draft night. Flemings measured with a 40.5-inch max vertical and elite speed across all his agility testing."

Here are sports experts' mock draft predictions for the Clippers:

Experts' share Los Angeles Clippers mock draft selection

USA TODAY Sports: Kingston Flemings, Houston, point guard

CBS Sports: Keaton Wagler, Illinois, point guard

ESPN:  Keaton Wagler, Illinois, point guard

Bleacher Report: Darius Acuff Jr., Akansas, point guard

NBAdraft.net: Darius Acuff Jr., Akansas, point guard

Yahoo Sports: Keaton Wagler, Illinois, point guard

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Los Angeles Clippers mock draft 2026 first-round predictions

Open Thread: The opportunity for the 3-2 comeback

(Original Caption) Boston Celtics player-coach Bill Russell and guard Emmette Bryant (7) head for the showers after the Celtics defeated the los Angeles Lakers 108-106 to capture their eleventh National Basketball Association Championship.

In the NBA, overcoming a 3-2 deficit is notoriously difficult. But it has been done.

In 1969, the Boston Celtics trailed the Los Angeles Lakers. After dropping the first two games, the Celtics tied the series before falling in a 3-2 hole.

The Celtics won the final two games, giving Bill Russell his swan song. Russell started is career with the Celtics in 1956 before retiring after the 1969 Finals. From 1966-1969 he served as player-coach. Over 13 seasons, Russell and the Celtics won 11 titles.

The 1969 Finals was also the first year to offer a Finals MVP. The winner was Jerry West of the Los Angeles Lakers. This was the only time that the MVP award was given to a player on the losing team.

The 3-2 comeback has happened a couple of others, though it is not common. Two games can be daunting.

The Spurs return home for Game 6. And that should be the only thing on their mind. They need a full team effort to force a Game 7. They have a plan which requires flawless execution.

The good news they know what needs to be done, and they have the skills to accomplish it.

Go Spurs Go!


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Our community guidelines apply which should remind everyone to be cool, avoid personal attacks, not to troll and to watch the language.

DitD & Open Post – 5/27/26: A Delicate Stage Edition

NEWARK, NEW JERSEY - APRIL 12 : Nico Hischier #13 of the New Jersey Devils warms up before the NHL regular season game against the Ottawa Senators at the Prudential Center on April 12, 2026 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Andrew Maclean/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links

On a potential Nico Hischier contract extension: “All things being equal, it would appear an extension is the most likely outcome, but things are at an early and delicate stage.” [The Athletic ($)]

“Hischier will be 28 before playing a game on a new deal and he has made 22 playoff appearances. Of course he wants to hear the roadmap to more success. There’s no denying the team has an excellent core, which he is aware of, and Mehta’s winning pedigree should have Hischier confident the front office can make the right moves. I don’t envision this negotiation being much of a struggle, and expect the captain to sign a lucrative extension before reporting to training camp in September.” [Infernal Access]

“Trading Nemec may make the most sense because if he returns to the Devils and struggles as he has the last two seasons, his trade value will plummet. And with the Devils needing some scoring help, Nemec may be their best trade asset. We’ll see what GM Sunny Mehta and the Devils decide to do.” [Devils on the Rush]

Hockey Links

The Golden Knights are on to the Stanley Cup Final:

The Hurricanes take Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Final:

Evgeni Malkin will return to the Penguins:

A look at the top remaining free agents in this summer’s class: [Sportsnet]

“Maple Leafs forward Max Domi is out indefinitely after complications arose during an offseason surgery. Toronto announced the news Monday and shared that Domi — who played through his undisclosed ailment during the 2025-26 regular season — will continue to work with the club’s medical staff until being reevaluated ahead of training camp in September.” [ESPN]

“Veteran forward Claude Giroux is looking to come back for a 20th NHL season this fall, TSN Hockey Insider Pierre LeBrun reports. Giroux is a pending unrestricted free agent after spending the past four years with the Ottawa Senators. He said after Ottawa’s first-round playoff exit last month he would need time to weigh his future, but it appears he’s not ready to hang up his skates just yet.” [TSN]

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Wednesday Headlines: NBA Draft Withdrawl Deadline

CHICAGO, IL - MAY 11: NBA draft prospect, Milan Momcilovic poses for a portrait during the 2026 NBA Draft Combine on May 11, 2026 at Wintrust Arena in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Good morning, BBN!

Today is the day we find out exactly which players will stay in the NBA Draft and which will officially declare for it.

Obviously, all eyes are on Milan Momcilovic for Kentucky.

If the Cats can convince him to come back for this year, that gives BBN the spark plug it needs to get excited about the coming season.

However, it looks like the Arizona Wildcats have become a contender for Momcilovic because they believe Koa Peat will stay in the draft. St. John’s has also been heavily in the mix.

If the Cats can’t land Momcilovic, their options are looking tigher and tigher to fill their last roster spots.

Allen Graves was another one to potentially watch out for, but with first-round projections, it seems he’ll be staying in the Draft, same with Tounde Yessoufou.

For what it’s worth, Mike Rutherford of Card Chronicle and SB Nation thinks Momcilovic returns to school and signs with Kentucky.

A big day for BBN. Do you think Momcilovic stays? If he doesn’t, do you think he’ll commit to UK?

Tweet of the Day

Things you love to see.

Headlines

Change of Direction Leads Cats Into NCAA Tournament – UK Athletics

Bat Cats have rallied; now, anything is possible!

Wildcats Set for Start of NCAA East First Round on Home Turf – UK Athletics

Good luck, UK Track and Field!

Sources: NCAA denies reinstatement for Texas Tech QB Sorsby – ESPN

This is probably the most intriguing case I’ve seen in sports in a while.

Jessica Pegula suffers first-round upset by Kimberly Birrell in French Open – Yahoo Sports

Exciting match!

It’s time for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to be the MVP: Thunder need SGA to step up vs. Spurs – CBS Sports

You’ll know if he did this morning, but I’m excited to see SGA, hopefully, step up.

Texans give star WR Nico Collins raise in reworked deal – ESPN

Well-deserved.

Mauricio Pochettino’s USMNT World Cup squad is officially revealed– Yahoo Sports

Excited for the World Cup!

‘They were not going to tank’: Jerome Bettis supports Steelers’ decision to re-sign Aaron Rodgers – CBS Sports

I respect it.

Sources: Kenny Atkinson to return as Cavaliers head coach – ESPN

A tad surprising.

The longer Seattle waits on a Devon Witherspoon contract extension, the pricier it gets – CBS Sports

Agreed, lock him down!

Thunder or Spurs in NBA Finals: Who should Knicks want to face?

On 7th Ave., outside the arena that will host its first NBA Finals game in 27 years, fans poured onto the streets with brooms. They climbed streetlamps and scaffolding and withstood a fine rain that fell all night.

On the mayor’s smartphone — with a hat tip to the New York City Department of Sanitation — a well-timed troll was posted in 43 total characters.

In Harlem, a smattering of “Let’s go Knicks” chants could be heard deep into the night Monday, May 25, well after the New York Knicks demolished the Cleveland Cavaliers in the Eastern Conference finals.

But now that New York (and its fans) have this time to sit back and scout their future opponent, whom should they prefer to face: the Oklahoma City Thunder or the San Antonio Spurs?

Though the Knicks appear likely to enter the NBA Finals as underdogs regardless of opponent, the answer is the Spurs, the primary reason being San Antonio’s inexperience in the playoffs.

While the Spurs have been tremendous this postseason and have played well beyond their expected maturity, this is still a young team whose players — at least in most cases — are making their first postseason runs.

That inexperience showed Tuesday, May 26 in Game 5 of the Western Conference finals, a pivotal game in the series, when San Antonio failed to match Oklahoma City’s desperation and urgency.

The Thunder, the defending champions, understand the effort and grind it takes to compete with consistency. They present a far more formidable test, at least in terms of the intangibles of experience.

And while regular-season results shouldn’t carry too much weight, the Knicks nonetheless topped San Antonio 2-1, including the NBA Cup championship in December.

Elsewhere, and as crazy as it sounds, the Knicks can actually use the Victor Wembanyama matchup to their advantage. Wembanyama might be the toughest to guard in the solar system, but the Knicks are actually well equipped to slow him down.

For one, New York has tremendous defensive versatility because of its size, length and athleticism at wing. Each of OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges and Josh Hart can defend Wembanyama, though that assignment would likely fall to Anunoby, a second-team All-Defensive selection.

Anunoby defended Wembanyama (and to some success) during their regular-season matchups, but this would be a team effort.

But New York can take different tactical approaches against Wembanyama: when the Knicks want to go smaller, they can deploy Anunoby, and when they want to defend him with size and physicality, they can ask centers Karl-Anthony Towns and Mitchell Robinson — both of whom outweigh Wembanyama — to throw their size around to make Wembanyama uncomfortable.

The key for both Towns and Robinson, who each can be susceptible to foul trouble, would be to maintain discipline.

On the other end of the floor, New York’s offensive portfolio can pose problems for Wembanyama. If the Spurs would decide for Wembanyama to defend either Towns, Anunoby or Hart, all three can roam the perimeter, which would force Wembanyama to vacate the paint. In this respect, Towns poses the biggest issues with his extensive range.

By drawing Wembanyama out of the paint, Jalen Brunson and other Knicks players would have more space to attack the rim.

Granted, that’s all easier said than done, but the Knicks are playing historic basketball.

The New York Knicks' OG Anunoby dunks the ball against the San Antonio Spurs during the NBA Cup Final at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas on Dec. 16, 2025. The Knicks won the game, 124-113.

This is another case where Oklahoma City — with its active hands, persistence at the point of attack and rim protection with Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein — can pose larger problems.

The Thunder also have a deeper team and often play 11- and 12-man rotations.

Either way, whether it’s the Spurs or the Thunder, this will be New York’s toughest test of the postseason, and by a wide margin.

All the more reason why the Knicks should hope that the Western Conference finals extends to seven games. It has been a hard-fought, physical battle, and a series like this can wear on the winning team.

And if the Knicks are to win their first NBA championship in 53 years, against these opponents, they’ll need all the help they can get.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Knicks should be rooting for Spurs as 2026 NBA Finals opponent

Rockets 2025-2026 season in review: Kevin Durant

Apr 12, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant (7) holds a basketball during a timeout during the second quarter against the Memphis Grizzlies at Toyota Center. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images | Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

“The Rockets are realistic championship contenders after this trade – and that’s the whole reason the deal happened.”Tim McMahon

“This elevates them to championship contention… Wouldn’t surprise me at all to see them in the Western Conference Finals… The Houston Rockets are instant title contenders.”Stephen A. Smith

“When you put Kevin Durant on any basketball team, immediately they become right into the mix of contenders.”Kenny Smith

These were just some of the national media reactions to the Houston Rockets acquiring Kevin Durant in a “blockbuster” trade with the Phoenix Suns last summer. The reactions weren’t surprising, as many of them had been clamoring for the deal from the moment the Rockets were eliminated by Golden State in Round 1 of the 2025 playoffs. However one writer, from a humble but legendary blog in its own right, was far less enthusiastic of the prospect of trading away the leading scorer and the defensive heartbeat of a 52-win team that had just increased its win total from the previous season by 19 games, only to lose to a far more experienced team in playoffs.

“Kevin Durant is no doubt one of the greatest scorers the game has ever seen, and even at the age of 37, he can still get it done. But he is 37, and in the last three seasons, he has missed 62 total games due to injury. Kevin Durant going to a team that will depend on his availability in order to compete for a championship likely will suffer the fate of… well the Phoenix Suns….Keep in mind that whoever trades for Kevin Durant will also have to give a contract extension … Paying a nearly 40-year-old Kevin Durant $60 million… These are the types of moves only bad teams make.” Nick Stevenson

To be fair, the Rockets extension of Kevin Durant ended up being an average of $45-million per year, which under the circumstances was a very prudent move by them. So, in that regard, I was wrong. The argument could be made I was wrong about the risk of Kevin Durant’s injury history… until I wasn’t.

At the age of 37, Kevin Durant played in 78 regular season games in 2025-2026. That is the most games played by him since the 2013-2014 campaign. In those 78 games, he led the Rockets in scoring (26.0 ppg), he led them in minutes played (36.4 mpg), and he led them in field goal percentage, three-point percentage, and true shooting percentage. In the regular seaso,n he was everything as advertised on the court… a bucket. Early on, he even seemed to be willing to take on more of a leadership role amongst the young group surrounding him. Then came February.

That’s when the internet became suspicious that KD was using a burner account to trash his teammates. Wherever you land on this conspiracy, the fact that it’s even remotely believable speaks volumes. By that time, the Rockets were in the midst of losing games that they shouldn’t, blowing big leads, and proving themselves to be their most awful in the most critical moments of games. The one thing the national media told us was the reason the Rockets needed KD for was apparently taken as gospel by the coaches and players who seemed to have no other plan in crunch time other than, force the ball to Durant, then stand and watch.

There were some games where the strategy worked out, but early in the season, even when the Rockets were winning games at a high clip, it was clear that simply depending on Kevin Durant to bail you out in clutch situations was not a winning formula against the upper echelon in the league. The Rockets were not winning games against the best of the best because their offense became stagnant, predictable, and too often there was a lack of execution. This problem is not all on Kevin Durant, but throughout the entire season, he unfortunately never became a part of the solution either. The key injuries to Fred VanVleet and Steven Adams were contributing factors as well. Therefore, going into the playoffs it was clear that the Rockets were going to have no choice but to rely heavily on the iso creation of Kevin Durant to win playoff games, until…

On April 17, 2026, the Houston Chronicle reported that Kevin Durant was “Questionable” for the playoff opener against the Lakers, with a knee injury he reportedly got in a team practice, colliding with a teammate trying recover a loose ball going out of bounds. He would indeed miss Game 1 of that series, play 41 minutes in Game 2, scoring 20 of his 23 points in the first half, then would proceed to miss the last 3 games of the series with an ankle injury. As you well know, the Rockets lost the series in six games, averaging 98.6 points per game.

Those are all of the facts, sprinkled with some opinions from myself and others who cover the sport. Let’s be clear, the book is not closed on whether the trade for Kevin Durant was the right move. Not after just one season when Kevin Durant is at least contractually, going to be playing for the Rockets for two more years. However, for 2025-2026, we have to admit that this team and the impact that Kevin Durant would have, fell far short of expectations, or the expectations were unreasonable in the first place.

Whether you are in the camp of the national media who crowned the Rockets immediate contenders, or you were amongst those who were cautious if not skeptical… the fact is none of us are right and none of us are wrong. Not yet anyway, but those of us who were skeptical are very close to looking as if we were right. As more trade rumors continue to surround the Rockets this offseason, with names such as Kyrie Irving and Jaylen Brown being floated, it’s my opinion that any trade involving Kevin Durant would be an admission that acquiring him in the first place was a mistake. An even scarier thought is any trade that doesn’t include him will mean giving up more young talent for an older player to pair with a now 38-year-old Kevin Durant coming off yet another injury that cut his season short. Needless to say, Rafael Stone has work to do.

If you believed Kevin Durant made the Rockets instant contenders, then 2025-2026 was a failed season in your eyes. If you were skeptical that 37-year-old with extensive injury history could be counted on to put a team on his back and carry them to a championship, this is still a failed season in your eyes. It is still my opinion that in a perfect world, carrying this team on his back offensively was not what he was brought here for. At least it shouldn’t have been what he was brought here for. He should have been the compliment to Alperen and Amen leading this team. That’s not what happened, and if what did happen was the plan all along, then once again, it’s time to start holding the decision makers for this team to the fire.

Kevin Durant wraps up our player season in review series. It was a very disappointing end to the season, but now is the time to look ahead. Let the offseason truly begin! As always, thank you to the TDS faithful for rocking with us through thick and thin. We will continue to be here with you breaking down all the speculation, rumors, and news when it breaks. Go Rockets!

Exit Interview: Jordan Walsh proved he belonged

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - APRIL 28: Jordan Walsh #27 of the Boston Celtics reacts during the second half of Game Five of the First Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoff against the Philadelphia 76ers at TD Garden on April 28, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Entering his third season as a Celtic, Jordan Walsh needed to make a statement. 

After a rough second year in the Summer League and spot opportunities in Year 2, Walsh had a massive opportunity to crack the rotation in Jayson Tatum’s absence. Early on, it didn’t feel like those opportunities were coming Jordan’s way, and then he hit a corner dagger against Orlando on Nov. 9.

That shot set Walsh on the path to a solid season as a 3&D wing, earning 25 starts and 68 appearances, while establishing himself as the team’s go-to defender against opposing stars.

Walsh finished the regular season guarding star-caliber players 30.74% of the time, placing him in the 99th percentile (7th out of 523 players according to BBall Index).  

Let’s look back on Walsh’s season, and what’s to come for the 22-year-old. 

The Regular Season Breakout 

The two biggest things that stood out about Walsh’s season were his defense and his 3-point shooting. 

Defensively, Walsh made a legitimate impact on a team that was ranked fourth in defensive rating and first in opponent points allowed. 

Two nights after the Orlando shot, Walsh guarded Tyrese Maxey in Philly for six minutes, holding him to 1-of-9 shooting. The very next night, it started the chain of 16 consecutive starts. The feeling was that Walsh was quickly establishing himself as a legitimate starting wing for the first time in his NBA career. 

James Harden, Cade Cunningham and Paolo Banchero were all in the top-5 of Walsh’s list for most common matchups, and he often left with passing marks against his greatest challenges. There were even some Victor Wembanyama minutes (3:24 to be exact). Walsh’s versatility was finally on display. 

As a perimeter player, what was once a huge point of emphasis in his game actually grew into a strength. 

Walsh wasn’t a high-volume shooter by any stretch, averaging 1.8 attempts per game and 125 attempts in total, but when he fired them off, it became a reliable sight to see him drain it. He shot 38% on all threes, 42% on catch-and-shoot looks and 40% from the corners. 

Something that also flies under the radar but was an important part to Walsh’s regular season success was his impact crashing the glass. For a team that heavily emphasized rebounding from all positions after a frontcourt overhaul, Walsh emerged as one of their best glass-crashers from the wings, averaging 4 rebounds per game. 

After Walsh’s string of starting appearances, he saw a drop in his time on the floor as other starting combinations began to take shape, particularly with the return of Jayson Tatum. After Tatum returned on March 6, Walsh had eight DNPs for the month, though he’d finish the season with starts in the last three games. 

Notable season highlights include a perfect 100% shooting night on eight attempts against the Wizards on Dec. 4, which ended with a career-high 22 points, a 6-for-7 shooting night with four threes against the Lakers on Dec. 5, and double-doubles in wins against the Cavaliers (Nov. 30) and Clippers (Jan. 3). 

Limited postseason opportunities mar regular season progress 

A favorite for minutes off the bench after a promising sample size defending Tyrese Maxey, Walsh ultimately found himself ninth in playoff minutes. 

Those minutes fluctuated to as high as 19 in Game 6, and to as low as a shade under 5 minutes in Game 7. 

Walsh played the second most minutes on Maxey behind Derrick White, and Maxey shot 47% with two turnovers and one blocked shot during that matchup. Among all Sixers matched up with Walsh, he held them to a 41% defensive field goal percentage for the series, forced four turnovers and blocked two shots. 

From what we saw, his defensive impact mostly held up, though Maxey proved to be a more difficult assignment than what we saw in the two regular season games where Walsh matched up on him. 

Most disappointing was a significant dropoff in his low-volume scoring efficiency, particularly from the 3-point line. Walsh shot just 2-of-12 on his 3-point tries and was an overall 21% shooter, ending the season with two missed threes and no other counting stats in his brief Game 7 appearance.

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – APRIL 28: Tyrese Maxey #0 of the Philadelphia 76ers drives to the basket against Jordan Walsh #27 of the Boston Celtics during the first quarter in Game Five of the First Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoff at TD Garden on April 28, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With the season on the line and Jayson Tatum out, the Celtics put more trust in Baylor Scheuermann (22 minutes) and Hugo González (13 minutes) to round out the rotation.

Looking Ahead 

What felt like his last chance to crack the rotation ended in restored faith in Walsh’s future prospects with Boston. 

The Celtics have a lot of wing options on the bench, but Walsh has his own identity, and with a club option that’s a team-friendly $2.4 million cap hit, it’s likely the Celtics will retain his services at a low-cost, or look to even extend him now. 

A seismic change could possibly warrant a choice between picking up the options of either Walsh or Ron Harper Jr., but with both displaying different types of upside as rotation contributors, it’s a good bet to assume they both find themselves on the Opening Night roster. 

Walsh needed a chance to show what two seasons riding the bench did for him, and he got it. We saw some promising signs from the 38th overall pick, who is looking like another quality late-draft find from Brad Stevens. 

What exactly are the Savannah Bananas becoming?

Savannah Banana Malachi Mitchell flips in the air as the team cheers before the start of a bananaball game against the Kansas City Monarchs at Legends Field in Kansas City, Kansas.Photograph: Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images

The Savannah Bananas brand has, arguably, become bigger than the Savannah Bananas themselves. What would seem to be a crucial component of the Bananas experience – the actual team – is increasingly absent from games featuring the showboating version of baseball that the Bananas themselves popularized. By all accounts, however, fans don’t care.

When the Guardian last examined the Bananas in 2023, the organization had only just abandoned its amateur roots in collegiate summer baseball to focus strictly on “bananaball”, a funhouse-mirror reflection of baseball that focuses on trick plays, player antics and crowd engagement. At the time, bananaball was restricted to two teams – the Bananas and their forever foes, the Party Animals – who seemed prepared to follow a well-trodden path to long-term, if moderate success.

Basketball’s Harlem Globetrotters, for example, have been running circles (often literally) around the same, scripted-to-lose opponent in exhibition games since the 1950s. The Bananas could have easily replicated this formula for decades. A bananaball game on a sunny May evening at Richmond’s CarMax Park, however, reveals the many ways that the Bananas organization is doing things its own way.

When asked, most fans outside the ballpark answered with versions of “I’m going to the Savannah Bananas game tonight.” But they were actually on their way to see the Firefighters take on the Indianapolis Clowns, two of the six full-time, professional bananaball teams touring the US. While the Firefighters and Clowns faced off in Richmond, the Party Animals were simultaneously playing the Loco Beach Coconuts in Las Vegas. Elsewhere, the Bananas drew more than 100,000 fans in College Station, Texas, against the Texas Tailgaters. What was once a pair of barnstorming exhibition teams has become a small but growing league. The Globetrotters never made this jump.

The eccentric team names are part of an effort to broaden banana ball’s appeal to a wider audience. The Texas Tailgaters lean into good ol’ cowboy imagery. The newest team, the Coconuts, appear to exist somewhere at the intersection of Jimmy Buffett and the South Pacific. The Firefighters are composed of square-jawed hunks. The team name most familiar to baseball ears, the Clowns, also appears to have the most organic origin story. The original Indianapolis Clowns were one of the best-known Negro League teams in the early to mid-20th century.

There is also a lot of merchandising. Stalls at games flog everything from caps to koozies. This is not a flaw in itself – even coffee shops double as merch stands nowadays – but it is indicative of a larger change within bananaball. When the Guardian last encountered the Bananas, there was an enjoyable “everybody’s here” element. Happy Rockwellian families were seated alongside raucous bachelorette parties who themselves sat by pairings of older baseball fans breaking down every pitch. Bananaball in 2026 feels less like a baseball game and more like a day at Disney World.

The target demographic is clearly children. Nearly everyone at the Richmond ballpark was either a child or accompanying one. Music sets the ambience, and gen Alpha poultry-themed anthems Chicken Banana and Steve’s Lava Chicken blare from the stadium’s speakers.

The Disney comparison is not necessarily a coincidence. Multiple players mention an overlap between Disney fandom (including Disney adults) and bananaball fandom, and Jesse Cole, founder of the Bananas, identifies Walt Disney as a key influence.

Not that bananaball crowds are solely families with young kids. Plenty of other groups are scattered throughout the stands in Richmond, including hardcore baseball fans. Heather Albrecht speaks from a place of deep baseball knowledge – she and her sister have attended games at 29 of the 30 major league ballparks – part of a bucket list trip with their late mother.

“Seeing the crowds and seeing the hype, I think bananaball could overtake MLB in popularity,” she says. “They’re selling out MLB parks that, when we went to them [for MLB games], were empty ghost towns.”

MLB need not worry just yet; the average major league crowd last season was 29,386, a figure that has held pretty steady for the last decade. But perhaps MLB could take some pointers from bananaball as it frets about attracting younger fans. If bananaball’s TikTok dances, pyrotechnics and heavy crowd work were stripped away, the on-field product may make for an interesting side competition within the world of professional baseball. Bananaball could, for example, be the T20 cricket to MLB’s test counterpart.

The preference for showmanship sits at the heart of bananaball. Whether intentional or not, Cole’s bananaball is maybe best understood through the lens of comedy – the game’s outcome is less important than the laughs per minute on the way there. And, if a competitive element emerges, all the better.

It is interesting to note that, despite the Bananas’ achievements in baseball, there have been no significant attempts to replicate their process in the worlds of American football, hockey, soccer or cricket, or even tennis, golf or boxing. This lack of banana-ization in other sports persists despite the fact that format-innovation continues to occur within baseball. Just outside Richmond, for example, another amateur collegiate summer team is pioneering “cosmic baseball“ (baseball played with UV-reactive gear under black lights). The team behind cosmic baseball, the Tri-City Chili Peppers, openly namecheck the Bananas as an inspiration (both the Bananas and the Chili Peppers have their roots in the Coastal Plain League). Cole welcomes the competition.

“I commend anybody that’s trying to do something different [and] unique to make their sport fun and bring joy to people. I think it’s good – we’ll see a lot more [competitors emerge].”

Cole is similarly thoughtful when responding to critics who denounce bananaball as a passing fad, something he says he thinks about every day.

“I see the comments,” he says. “‘This will be done in a year. It’ll be done in a few years.’ I see it and, if you look at history, that would be a strong bet to make. If you look at the And 1’s of basketball and the different leagues that have come and gone – that would be a strong bet to make ... There are only a few companies that have sustained creativity over a long time. You look at Disney, you look at Saturday Night Live ... They’re continually creating, trying new things, pushing the envelope on what can be done. And, they’re not afraid to fail. I think we share that.”

And, perhaps focusing on a young demographic is the right way to secure this lofty, decades-spanning goal.

Towards the end of the game in Richmond, two Little-League-aged fans (in bananaball gear) are playing catch beyond centerfield. Before each throw, they pass the ball between their legs or around their backs, copying the trick plays they’ve seen on the field. Both talk about the sport’s teams and players knowledgably. When asked if they want to be ballplayers when they grow up, they pipe up enthusiastically.

“I want to be a Firefighter,” one shouts. When asked which player he most wants to be like, he responds “No, a firefighter. I want to fight fires.” If his dreams come true, it’s pretty clear which team his future family will be rooting for.

Which position are the Yankees most likely to target via trade?

TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 25: Manager Aaron Boone and general manager Brian Cashman of the New York Yankees talk during spring training at George M. Steinbrenner Field on February 25, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

For as much flak as Brian Cashman can catch for hugging prospects, the Yankees are perennially one of the most active buyers at the trade deadline. Last year was one the team’s most aggressive deadlines ever, shipping out almost 20 prospects and importing seven veteran players. In 2024, it was Jazz Chisohlm Jr. and Mark Leiter Jr. that were brought over the summer. 2023 was a bit of an aberration, the Yankees skipping out on deadline shopping and the playoffs, but in 2022 they traded for Frankie Montas, Harrison Bader, Lou Trivino, Scott Effross and Andrew Benintendi midseason, while 2021 saw the additions of Anthony Rizzo, Joey Gallo, and Andrew Heaney.

As has been typical of the Yankees during this era, they are towards the top of the standings early on, but with a few clear holes on the roster. The infield is littered with question marks, the team has gotten less than zero offensive production from their catchers, and the bullpen feels very shaky (even if it’s overall numbers on the season are fairly impressive thus far). The full expectation should be for New York to once again deploy prospect capital to shore up the roster come midsummer. The topic for today, though, is which position they’re most likely to try and upgrade (for argument’s sake, let’s leave side the bullpen for now, since essentially every contending team these days makes some sort of relief trade).

For a team that has had big holes in the early going, the answer is surprisingly complex. It’d be simple enough to look at, say, third base, where Ryan McMahon’s woeful work at the plate has left him exactly at replacement level per FanGraphs. But, the Yankees could reason that if McMahon’s struggles continue, they have answers in-house. José Caballero has performed well as the team’s primary shortstop and could shift over to third, allowing Anthony Volpe to return to his old position. Amed Rosario has also been well above average with the bat, albeit with weak defense at the hot corner.

The situation at catcher is also fraught. The team’s backstop have put up a pitiful .254 wOBA this year, third worst in the league. However, the gap between the Yankees’ catchers expected wOBA and their actual figure is easily the biggest in baseball, suggesting some poor fortune, and the defensive work of Austin Wells and J.C. Escarra is so exemplary that finding upgrades at the position isn’t as simple as it might seem given the pair’s futility at the plate so far.

And then, there’s the fact that there’s already been a tiny bit of rumbling about the possibility the Yankees will actually try to add to the strongest part of their roster, their rotation, by targeting injured Tigers ace Tarik Skubal. I’ll believe it when I see it, but we can’t disregard the idea; with Detroit floundering, Skubal may end up as the best player on the trade market, and adding him could give the Yankees a super rotation unlike any we’ve seen, while also allowing them to subsequently upgrade their bullpen by bumping overqualified starters into the relief corps.

What do you think? Are the Yankees most likely to target corner infield, catcher, starting pitcher? Something else entirely? Let us know in the comments below.


It’ll be another busy day ahead of tonight’s game, with Matt running through what you might have missed last night, and Jeff profiling coach Mark Connor for our Yankee Birthday series. Also, Josh writes on the wonder that is having so many starting pitchers on one team that fans can look forward to watching, and Kento reminds us to keep things in perspective with Jazz Chisholm Jr.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees at Kansas City Royals

Time: 7:40 p.m. EST

Video: Amazon Prime Video, Royals.TV

Venue: Kauffman Stadium, Kansas City, MO

Blues steal State of Origin opener from Maroons – as it happened

New South Wales launch incredible comeback from 0-20 down after Queensland let first-half dominance slip away

Harry Grant was asked about his side’s new halves pairing, and the influence of Sam Walker on the team. “It’s been enjoyable to build that combination,” he said. “Really talented players individually and hopefully both those boys can bring that creativity tonight.”

With Grant, Cameron Munster, and Kalyn Ponga in the 13, Sam Walker won’t be asked to shoulder too much of the burden on debut, which should afford him the freedom to shine.

Continue reading...

Victor Wembanyama's first playoffs proving to be tough learning experience

There have been moments these playoffs where Victor Wembanyama has looked otherworldly. Like the best player on the planet. Game 1 of the Western Conference Finals was the perfect example, when he dropped 41 points with 24 rebounds and looked every bit the best player on the planet.
Then there are nights like Game 5 on Tuesday: 4-of-15 shooting, 0-of-5 from 3 and just 4-of-9 in the paint. While he finished with 20 points (thanks to a dozen free throws), he did not impose his will on the game. Wembanyama was not the best player on the court, he wasn't the best player on his team.

"He's got to take more than 15 shots, even with the free throws. He's going to have to score more than 20 points, for sure..." Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said. "OKC did a good job. We've got to do a better job."

If San Antonio is going to advance to the NBA Finals, what is required of Wembanyama is both straightforward and incredibly arduous:

He has to be the best player on the court in a series against the defending champions led by the two-time MVP.

He was that in Games 1 and 4, and the Spurs won those two.

He was not in Game 5. He was again pushed out to the perimeter too often by Isaiah Hartenstein and did not dominate the paint like the Spurs needed.
"It's a team defense," the Thunder's Jared McCain said of how they defended Wemby. "We talked about it. We made adjustments to it. We know that when he gets going, their whole team gets going."

His first playoffs

The criticism of Wembanyama's performance is both justified — he simply wasn't good enough in a pivotal game — and overlooks the simple fact that this is his first playoff run. At age 22.

Every future star's first playoff run is messy (Magic Johnson excepted). Kobe Bryant was airballing shots against the Jazz. LeBron James put up numbers but learned hard lessons about efficiency and physicality from the Pistons. On NBC's postgame show, Vince Carter and Trace McGrady recalled their first playoffs, when Carter shot 30%, McGrady 39%, and their Raptors were swept by the Knicks. Carmelo Anthony's Nuggets won one game in his first playoffs, when he shot 33%.

The stakes are higher for Wembanyama: If he isn't the best player on the court, the Spurs lose. That's happened three times in this series.

Now he has to turn that around and have back-to-back epic games — he has to play like he did in Games 1 and 4 — or San Antonio's season ends. That's a tall task against the best defense in the NBA, one that has made him uncomfortable like no other in this series.

But that's the air Wembanyama has put himself in, a challenge he relishes.

It's just a big ask, especially in a first playoff run.

New York Yankees news: What can Gerrit Cole be?

May 22, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Gerrit Cole (45) runs out to the mound for the top of the fifth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: Gerrit Cole will make his second start of the season tonight in Kansas City, coming off a season debut on Friday that went about as smooth as we could expect. While he didn’t get to throw quite as much as he would have liked, all signals are green that there should be no real restrictions against the Royals, and we’re free to speculate on the impact Cole will have on the rotation going forward. I don’t think we are going to get 2019 Gerrit Cole, but if he’s the third-best pitcher behind talent like Cam Schlittler and Max Fried, that is a rotation that will be damn hard to beat.

New York Daily News | Gary Phillips: The Yankee bullpen has been the topic of much conversation this year, inarguably the weakest unit on the team. One of the questions around the group is how its constructed, currently carrying two guys that could feasibly be starters. Paul Blackburn and Ryan Yarbrough are at their best when they’re working multiple innings, but neither have been so spectacular that there aren’t alternatives within the Yankee system, especially given the current group’s lack of velocity and whiff.

The Athletic | Brandon Kuty ($): We’re past the one-third mark of the season, and the Memorial Day weekend always seems a natural time to take stock of a baseball team. The 2026 Yankees seem to be a top and bottom heavy squad overall, with more than their share of straight-A students in Cam Schlittler, Aaron Judge, Ben Rice and others, and far too many players that would receive failing grade…and then there’s Austin Wells, whose parents would likely be getting a phone call.

The Sporting News | TJ French: Ryan McMahon may be in trouble. In two straight games the third baseman was sat, Monday in favor of José Caballero and benched Tuesday to give Amed Rosario a start, while Anthony Volpe manned shortstop in both games. McMahon has failed to find any kind of stick with the Yankees, and while he is a talented defender, there’s only so much value there when you’re leaving runs on the table 3 times a game.